This should also be a wake-up call that for whatever reason (who cares what for 
this discussion), if our bandwidth demands exceed our bandwidth supply, we must 
become more efficient at using our bandwidth. I'm hoping that we not only 
discuss peering and bandwidth, management and implementation, but look at the 
Content providers with the same level of scrutiny that we hold the Backbone 
transit providers to. We should look at video compression and codecs with the 
same level of urgency that we do bandwidth, because there will never be enough 
if both sides are not looked at.



Sincerely,

Brian A . Rettke
RHCT, CCDP, CCNP, CCIP
Network Engineer, CableONE Internet Services


-----Original Message-----
From: Jack Bates [mailto:jba...@brightok.net]
Sent: Wednesday, December 15, 2010 6:05 PM
To: Adam Rothschild
Cc: Kevin Neal; nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Some truth about Comcast - WikiLeaks style

On 12/15/2010 4:47 PM, Adam Rothschild wrote:
> Folk in
> content/hosting should find this all more than a little bit scary.

So you don't think the money content providers will pay Comcast won't
reflect on other eyeball networks who aren't important/large enough to
request financing? ie, Comcast could run lower rates and offer better
service by charging the content provider, while competitive eyeball
networks won't get the option to receive compensation from content
providers and have to charge appropriate rates to their customers.


Jack


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